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Bristol, Bristol, England

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Poetry

... ZVI 0 et rp - THE FLOWERS. L[Y w. If. PRIDFAUX ] Tiun owrb that deck this earth of oura, lhowm eloquent are they! ?? to the human heart they snlijiagly convey i And jt how pgrent :tle we to plsso their oire mninitions ily, Aldlitgazo %with listleisness of heart and inadvertent eye: To Childhoo, arce tiley tlot as hsopes Whlieh faoscinate the mind, And. Ieads1 thc yanolg hesrt gaily on1, with ...

Poetry

... 150tttpv. SONNET.-THE SPRING OF LIFE. [is -. sif. a'RIDErAUX.] our, Spring of life is like a Idoy-rose, blowing,_ .9niishille aund fragrance round it fondly Irlaying Radiant with hoples, like poesy a-nseying, Delight conies kindling where our steps arec going, And a wide landscape of romance liestowving, Blower and brake, and every scene arraying With its bright hues ideal; tovc displaying in ...

L'INSEGNA

... W'INSMc!NA. (FroSe the London Magazine.) This is incompar'ablv the best thing I have ever done ! said youngr Spanish paintei, who had ar rived but a few months be- fore in Naples; and, retiring a few paces, he gazed with pride mpon a painiting to which lie had juast given thelinishingtouches. '1 1aravag-gio will confess now that he has at length lound his equal. No, 1 will nt give it another ...

EPILOGUE

... ESpohent by Renry JefferiSi, at tihc Examiination at Mr. STO:NE'S SCHOOL, at Suillici' lull. Near Bristol. SOME follk collil never pay a debt, Ti'he public con ?? 5should gail, Nor care for ?? a lill . Cet Have prosper'duip O Cexpectatiou: Did theynoarethe lai's itrolg Alid still his school, beiieath hea. illight opCt' take themn il. ven's blessing,) [ilu: 'dlt i a))d n.y dear school-mate In ...

LITERATURE

... LITER ATURE. Canadian Scenery. Illustratfed from drawings bp IV. If. it Barstlett. Parts 1. and VI.-VirtuL, London. it is one, of the thousand privileges and advantages of wealth a' tist, if its possessor is prevented by eircnmstances, orivis toindo' il lenit, to go ill search of' tine scenery, he canl have fine(, scettery tc brought to hint. The artist goes far him, visits with toil and ...

LITERARY VARIETIES

... XZ>RATfLY VAUX1 TZ3TS. LiBERTV.-CiVil liberty, rigrhtly understood, consists of t protecting the right of' individoalu by the united force of society. t Society cannot be maintained, and, of course, call exert no pro- tection, ?? obedience to some sovereign power. And obe- 7. dienee is an empty name, if every individual has a right to 3 decide bow far he shall obey. KEAN'S STUDY.-Kean sat up ...

LITERARY VARIETIES

... LIWE1AZLY VAMZETIES. We travel into foreigm countries, not to improve nur own manners, but to learn the worst of theirs, and to transplant them carefully into our own climates. FuRNITenE WIVEks-Men mn.irry for fortune,- and some- times to please theirfancy; butinuch oftener than iseisprcetcd, they consider svhat the world .will say of it-how such la ?? in their friendsa' eyes will look at the ...

THE FLOOD, AND THE RESCUE

... TEM ELOOD, AND THEZ LZWCUE. A S'aory of ,lIassurchuetts. ( ?? It nay not be ?? to the majority of oilr. readers, that the scetery of the CItnnriticut rivire, esvvecill y aftev passing the nosthert limit of Milssactsetts, presents many aingularappear- nce22. Mauges of brokea and toweroig hills beoru in the fertile and verdant: vulleys every here eild thereconver-ing, as thoug Ih oace sonited ...

FASHIONS FOR JULY

... ~FASIZXNS. b'7a JU i)LW. A great question agitates the fioliontable world; a Party question, one which is eagerly dis- cussed kit every ooirhe, Lonitd'on alnd Pafsian, whlich oilnea prettS wnegeies ?? in) crowded n work rooms as rapidly as taper finknr's point which is disc', it'e'vvith a \'ltebility eqllil te b that produced by the opium, thi CoOn question, ol the me rits of tbe last new ...

LITEARY VARIETIES

... MITERA~W VAILIETZES. Thomas Camphellthe author ofthe Pleasures of Hope, is about to travalate tho works of Petrarch, Government, in pursuauco or its plan of granting pensions to literary men, haa conforred on Dr. James Browne, Ll.D., and Moember ot the Faicuty of Advocates tit Edinburgh, anl an- nuity of 1001., in consideration, it is oxpressly said, of his literary attsiaments. Tim ...

GREECE

... G 11 EEC E. An Original Composition, recited at the last Examination of tile Bristol College.-By Mu. OsLER. WnAT myriad visions rise at Hellas' name- Enchantress, conj'ring up the mighty past! What glorious thoughts of gage or poets' fame, Or theirs, who bravely fighting breathed their last! But, ah! no more those noble spirits taste Cephissus' wave, or list Socratic lore. Wily ebb'd for them ...

LITERATURE

... ZATEPLATunm. - I T/e Roaher Lord - Colburn, London. Thqtr is a degree of incongruity anid want of finish about pot- (ioIS of this work, alng with a freedans of spirit, ai freshuess and felicity in the delineation of chlracter, and at downrigist r toonesty of parpase, which appear to paint not the author as uillt hacnlleyed in] the belds of fiction. T'Jo plot is not contplex. Tbie Banlieir Lord ...